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Gambling

Combative, provocative and engaging live debate chaired by Michael Buerk. With Giles Fraser, Matthew Taylor, Anne McElvoy and Andrew Doyle. #moralmaze

Years of soft-touch regulation and the universal adoption of smartphones have created a 鈥減erfect storm of addictive 24/7 gambling鈥, making 鈥渢he lives of two million people miserable鈥 鈥 according to a House of Lords Select Committee report looking into the betting industry. Its 66 recommendations include a ban on 鈥渓oot boxes鈥 in video games, which can often be bought for real money and offer a randomised reward; many see this as a dangerous gateway to gambling for children. It wants to ease the industry out of sports sponsorship; half the Premier League football clubs are currently supported by betting companies. It wants new taxes on gambling with the money used to fund addiction clinics. What, if any, is the moral equivalence between problem gambling and other forms of addiction to recreational activities like drinking and smoking? If it鈥檚 a public health issue rather than a matter of individual free choice, how heavily should gambling be restricted? Perhaps, because gambling addiction can often have a wider social impact, hurting families and friends as well as the addicts themselves, it should be compared to drug abuse. If that鈥檚 reasonable, why not just treat gambling like any class A drug and make it illegal? Gambling enthusiasts and libertarians see it as a leisure activity which offers harmless fun to the vast majority of punters. They believe there is nothing intrinsically immoral about the industry, although most admit that betting companies do have a duty of care to vulnerable clients. Are problem gamblers the hapless victims of a heartless racket or does that rob them of moral agency and free them of personal responsibility? Is problem gambling a disease, a moral failing or just the downside of freedom? With Dr Henrietta Bowden-Jones, Brigid Simmonds, Christopher Snowdon and Matt Zarb-Cousin.

Producer: Dan Tierney.

Available now

43 minutes

Last on

Sat 11 Jul 2020 22:15

Broadcasts

  • Wed 8 Jul 2020 20:00
  • Sat 11 Jul 2020 22:15

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